Congress free from threat of too much work

The headline on the Congress-watching newspaper Politico said it all: "Done."

The subhead expanded on the assertion, but there wasn't much to add: "Congress is through legislating for the rest of 2013." And that was mid-month, even before the lawmakers knocked off for a 10-day Thanksgiving recess.

House Speaker John Boehner said the House shouldn't even remain in session in December. He was joking - we think.

As it is, the House, according to Majority Leader Eric Cantor's schedule, is to be in session only eight days in December and go home Dec. 13.

This is no accident; the schedule was made out in January.

The Senate doesn't have a strict schedule, but generally sticks close to the relaxed pace of their House colleagues.

The immigration bill is not likely to pass in December, and neither is the farm bill.

The 12 appropriations bills that fund the operations of the government and were supposed to have been passed by Sept. 30 haven't been passed. Meanwhile, Congress will resort to continuing resolutions, as a fancy way, as they say on Capitol Hill, of kicking the can down the road.

Dealing with the "sequester," the automatic, across-the board budget cuts Congress passed in a vain attempt to galvanize itself into action, will have to wait until next year; in the meantime, it's beginning to do real damage to critical government operations such as defense.

The House spent much of the year occupied with pointless trivia, such as repeated and fruitless attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act

Now it has found a new distraction, beating up on the White House for the botched rollout of the Affordable Care Act.

The Republicans had better hurry. The act is starting to work, especially in those states that opted to administer the law themselves.